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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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the way we get around it is if we remain an environment or someone can start a business, where someone can create a new opportunity to commit people to work. that will continue to happen unless we allow -- what government control does, bidding socialism is bad for the rest. that is not true. this is a socialist country. the rich do just fine. you have to be born to aristocracy and you can have a nice school to sculpted gardens. >> you do not see it in the new rich people. we do not seize the social mobility. you do not see bill gates starting a company and building it into one of the most powerful companies in the world. that is that we overcome these transitions. what is most dangerous is the power and control of government calcifies. it makes it harder for them to start. this is the threatening the future of all of us. >> i am an attorney and a newspaper columnist from wyoming. many people here today attended the march for like yesterday. we are aware that 55 million people are not here today. they're not paying into social security. could you please speak to the policy indications o
the way we get around it is if we remain an environment or someone can start a business, where someone can create a new opportunity to commit people to work. that will continue to happen unless we allow -- what government control does, bidding socialism is bad for the rest. that is not true. this is a socialist country. the rich do just fine. you have to be born to aristocracy and you can have a nice school to sculpted gardens. >> you do not see it in the new rich people. we do not seize...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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WRC
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. >> my concern is that the primal living conditions, the rudimentary environments that they're in provides for no separation between sexes, and therefore puts both men and women in very humiliating situations. >> jennifer hunt, whose humvee was blown up in iraq action got a purple heart, then sued the army to end gender discrimination. >> unit cohesion is task-based, and it's based on people being different and bringing their own experiences to the team, and not everybody being the same. >> reporter: or the same sex, said the pentagon today. still, it could be 2016 before women learn which frontline com impart units would be open to them, if any. i'm steve handelsman, news4. >>> is the medicine you're taking making you sicker? we'll tell you how to avoid the next big problem during cold and flu season. i'll introduce you also to a chef from prince george's county whose sweet treats have catapulted her into the limelight. she could be the next big chef on the food network. >>> as if the flu wasn't bad new, the cdc says a new strain of nor ovirus is sweeping the country. nor ovirus is the le
. >> my concern is that the primal living conditions, the rudimentary environments that they're in provides for no separation between sexes, and therefore puts both men and women in very humiliating situations. >> jennifer hunt, whose humvee was blown up in iraq action got a purple heart, then sued the army to end gender discrimination. >> unit cohesion is task-based, and it's based on people being different and bringing their own experiences to the team, and not everybody...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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WUSA
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and i say new york is probably most litigious environment in the world, and we have to be aware of that before we implement it. >> schieffer: what about people who sincerely believe that when we institute tighter controls on guns, even background checks, that it is infringing on their rights? >> well, we understand that. there are different cultures in this country, and i think, you know, the supreme court case, the district of columbia versus healthem, pretty much made certain that the concept of people having a right to guns with some legitimate regulations is here to stay. we're not looking to infringe on anybody's right to have guns legally. aware whatwe're looking to do is get the illegal guns off our streets. for our city, 90% of the guns we confiscate are coming from out of state. so we need a national, comprehensive strategy, or we need other states to put in the very strong, aggressive gun legislation that just passed under governor cuomo's leadership in the state legislature. so we are the target, so to speak. it's coming in from other places, but we're clear not looking to in
and i say new york is probably most litigious environment in the world, and we have to be aware of that before we implement it. >> schieffer: what about people who sincerely believe that when we institute tighter controls on guns, even background checks, that it is infringing on their rights? >> well, we understand that. there are different cultures in this country, and i think, you know, the supreme court case, the district of columbia versus healthem, pretty much made certain that...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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we're investing in the business as if it were a normal environment. it's like if you were running a pizza shop and the cost of mozzarella was higher, you wouldn't stop selling pizzas. you know, we try to be long term there and think it through. >> what policies will create jobs? that's what we're all trying to figure out. how do you create jobs. >> if we had done the grand bargain, it doesn't have to be exactly the one that anyone wants it. that showed that america can make decisions. it set a more effective tax system. it reduced taxes going forward. and i think we could have had a booming environment. i may be wrong. that's my own personal belief. if we had a grand bargain, america will take off. i think it's very important for america to get strong. the rest of the world needs us to. europe still has its issues. i think it's important that america kind of took the lead here. >> what does your gut tell you about all of this money moving into stocks recently? do you think this is sustainable? >> yeah, if the economy grows, it's sustainable. you know,
we're investing in the business as if it were a normal environment. it's like if you were running a pizza shop and the cost of mozzarella was higher, you wouldn't stop selling pizzas. you know, we try to be long term there and think it through. >> what policies will create jobs? that's what we're all trying to figure out. how do you create jobs. >> if we had done the grand bargain, it doesn't have to be exactly the one that anyone wants it. that showed that america can make...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> welcome back to this "kudlow report." we're all used to financial titans squaring off but it's usually in a board room, not a cable television. a long standing grudge between bill ackman and icahn turned into a slug fest. and bobby jindal said the republican party needs to grow up and start being the stupid party. >> the fbi reports they are investigating senator bob menendez on accusations he purchased prostitutes and attended sex parties in the dominican republic. he has rejected this party for months and much of this story frankly is still unconfirmed. joining to us explain the allegations and the newly surfaced evidence, executive editor at "the daily caller." what is the new evidence that has emerged? >> about 36 hours ago we received a cache of documents, about 58 pages of e-
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> welcome back to this "kudlow report." we're all used to financial titans squaring off but it's usually in a board room, not a cable television. a long standing grudge between bill ackman and icahn turned into a slug fest. and bobby...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
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if you are especially in a marine or water environment, you will find this layer of chert. it's in all colors, purple, green, red, blue. it's a beautiful rock. . >> one thing i wanted to ask you, the review in the paper recently on sunday said that your book is different from all the other books about the anastazi because you brought out some of the non-flattering parts of their culture like violence. how did you conclude that they were a violent culture? . >> well, i didn't necessarily conclude they were a violent culture, i just concluded there was violence in their culture. the evidence is very clear where you find masker sites, where every place you drop a trench there are bodies, unburied bodies missing their heads, in some cases where there will be a head in one room and you can match it up to the body which is in another room 100 yards away and they didn't just end up there; somebody took the head off. and there will be places where it's all femurs, all gathered together. and places where it's obviously some kind of warfare event where people are all huddled into one
if you are especially in a marine or water environment, you will find this layer of chert. it's in all colors, purple, green, red, blue. it's a beautiful rock. . >> one thing i wanted to ask you, the review in the paper recently on sunday said that your book is different from all the other books about the anastazi because you brought out some of the non-flattering parts of their culture like violence. how did you conclude that they were a violent culture? . >> well, i didn't...
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Jan 30, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN2
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and they have many detriments to the environment. they light up the sky. they're noisy. you can see them for a long time. we don't want to see them on the scenic mountains of east tennessee, where people come to see the great smoky mountains, not to see these big white towers. and in their enthusiasm for wind power, the solution our electricity needs in the united states, i am afraid the administration has -- is destroying the environment in the name of saving the environment and producing at the samat thesame time a type of ely that's intermittent, that only operates when the wind blows, is expensive, and has huge subsidies from the federal taxpayer that would make any tax breaks for oil companies look small by comparison. let's put all the questions about wind power aside except this one. why is the united states department of justice enforcing the migratory bird laws against one energy company -- one set of energy producers, oil and embarks and not against another -- oil and gas, and not against another, wind farms? that's what we'd like to noavment that's why we're w
and they have many detriments to the environment. they light up the sky. they're noisy. you can see them for a long time. we don't want to see them on the scenic mountains of east tennessee, where people come to see the great smoky mountains, not to see these big white towers. and in their enthusiasm for wind power, the solution our electricity needs in the united states, i am afraid the administration has -- is destroying the environment in the name of saving the environment and producing at...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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. >> in an environment that sometimes breeds violence inmates are constantly making weapons for protection. >> well, i've had knives, i keep knives. i've always heard it's better to be caught with one than without one in prison. >> and the officers must do whatever they can to curb future attacks. >> you don't need to see nothing, so keep your head down. >> i'm not going to tell you no more. >> this is a security level 5 facility in alabama. it goes from security level 1 to security level 6. >> last year we had what we consider like four major incidents happen. and that would have been a stabbing type of a situation, where it was very serious, life-threatening. and over the last four or five years we've averaged 3 1/2 to 4 of those types of events each year. and for this type of facility that's very good. >> and in this type of facility, many of the inmates are armed to the teeth. >> they seem to always think that everyone needs a weapon. they will take the smallest pieces of metal and make a real good weapon off of it. it doesn't have to be real big. even the smallest item is very dangero
. >> in an environment that sometimes breeds violence inmates are constantly making weapons for protection. >> well, i've had knives, i keep knives. i've always heard it's better to be caught with one than without one in prison. >> and the officers must do whatever they can to curb future attacks. >> you don't need to see nothing, so keep your head down. >> i'm not going to tell you no more. >> this is a security level 5 facility in alabama. it goes from...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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CNN
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restless, and start to feel strange, just not being where they're used to being, in that dangerous environment. >> we don't know how to open up, or express our -- tell our story either. that's also part of the problem. and the other part, too, as well, is being accepted in society. you know, because there's a brotherhood in the services around the world. and we have a problem when we come out of the service, you know, to the civilian world where people will judge us and use -- if they find out about our trauma, in one way or another, will use that against us. there is no brotherhood that i would say in a civilian community. >> when you see people who have gone through, what my previous guest went through, a school shooting, a young man and all the trauma that's happened to him. what do you think of that? what advice would you give him? >> basically he has to take back his life. finding forgiveness, you know, it's more finding forgiveness for himself so he can find peace in his life. he has so much potential that he's able to basically be able to impact and change so many people's lives. >> ton
restless, and start to feel strange, just not being where they're used to being, in that dangerous environment. >> we don't know how to open up, or express our -- tell our story either. that's also part of the problem. and the other part, too, as well, is being accepted in society. you know, because there's a brotherhood in the services around the world. and we have a problem when we come out of the service, you know, to the civilian world where people will judge us and use -- if they...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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WUSA
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. >> reporter: a fifth generation new orleansian inspired by the city of her birth, its environment, the wildlife and its music and food. >> i did a necklace called gumbo and it had little pearls that are actually referred to as rice pearls and i put slip, crabs and okra. >> reporter: rourkeers here are crafting beautiful designs like -- workers here are crafting beautiful designs like this sterling silver cuff. the hammering, polishing, beating all takes place here. >> so i'm there to supervise it and it doesn't go out if it's not right. >> reporter: not outsourcing was very important to minion and to the future of her city. >> i enjoy being a part of the community and keeping it strong. ♪[ music ] >> reporter: all right. again we're back at snug harbor in new orleans, louisiana, and there's brandon. his mom and dad are watching in northwest d.c. on t street northwest. we're proud of him and he know they're proud of him. kristen berset, i don't know if you're having as much fun as we are, but she has the latest in sports at the superdome. >> reporter: all right, andrea, thanks so
. >> reporter: a fifth generation new orleansian inspired by the city of her birth, its environment, the wildlife and its music and food. >> i did a necklace called gumbo and it had little pearls that are actually referred to as rice pearls and i put slip, crabs and okra. >> reporter: rourkeers here are crafting beautiful designs like -- workers here are crafting beautiful designs like this sterling silver cuff. the hammering, polishing, beating all takes place here. >>...
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Jan 30, 2013
01/13
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WMAR
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we think there's some things in the environment, perhaps bacteria in your gut that may influence the disease. it isn't one thing. it seems to be an interaction between those three things primarily. >> doctor, thanks for joining us. you have about 15 minutes to get your calls. the number is 410-481-2222. thank you very much. >>> as we get set for the super bowl, website woab has teamed up with the st. bernard project which has been rebuilding homes throughout new orleans. it was started by a washington, d.c. thorn who moved to new orleans after hurricane katrina to help get involved. christian schaffer talked with him. >> reporter: much of the lower ninth ward hasn't started to come back, but slowly recovery is happening. we found volunteers working with the st. bernard project inside every room of this home, including marty shield, a retired federal employee who lives in prince george's county. >> i get to see physical things done. >> reporter: she made her first trip to new orleans to volunteer one year after katrina and she's been coming back ever since. >> there's still lots to do
we think there's some things in the environment, perhaps bacteria in your gut that may influence the disease. it isn't one thing. it seems to be an interaction between those three things primarily. >> doctor, thanks for joining us. you have about 15 minutes to get your calls. the number is 410-481-2222. thank you very much. >>> as we get set for the super bowl, website woab has teamed up with the st. bernard project which has been rebuilding homes throughout new orleans. it was...
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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it is a different environment that requires a different level of physical stamina. we want to make sure we get the standards right. we don't want to over engineer them either, they ought to be fair. then we allow individuals of any sex to compete for the position. >> is it just physical standards? >> no, it not just physical standards. the standards we have for occupational -- for these military occupations or the military calls them ratings they including the from mental standards to physical standards. but physical standards are the one that people focus on. >> what about privacy? >> we can fix out privacy. -- we can figure out privacy. we figured that out right from the start. by the way, desert shield, desert storm 1991 h we did live in that environment where we were somewhat in the zests and we figured out privacy. -- we were somewhat nomadic and we figured out privacy. we can do that. >> the fact is, women are now in the ranks and that was the concern of the time. but we've been able to adapt to that situation. women are fighter pilots, air force, navy, have m
it is a different environment that requires a different level of physical stamina. we want to make sure we get the standards right. we don't want to over engineer them either, they ought to be fair. then we allow individuals of any sex to compete for the position. >> is it just physical standards? >> no, it not just physical standards. the standards we have for occupational -- for these military occupations or the military calls them ratings they including the from mental standards...
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training conducted by military personnel designed to ensure the military's ability to operate in urban environments routine training it's funny i don't remember police and military firing machine guns in my neighborhood growing up is it really necessary to simulate military operations that scare the living dickens out of people you know this reminds me of when i lived in oakland during the police crackdown of occupy there was a two week period where there were about five police helicopters constantly hovering above my neighborhood and after a couple days i seriously started losing sleep and becoming severely stressed and paranoid as i started become conditioned to live in what had become a military. police state so all of this really begs the question why is the us starting to condition us to be comfortable living in a constant state of fear surveillance and military aggression what are they really planning for. the letter. never seen anything like it. so guys right now i'd like to shift the focus and talk about something talk sick but you and i are ingesting every single day g.m.o. the better know
training conducted by military personnel designed to ensure the military's ability to operate in urban environments routine training it's funny i don't remember police and military firing machine guns in my neighborhood growing up is it really necessary to simulate military operations that scare the living dickens out of people you know this reminds me of when i lived in oakland during the police crackdown of occupy there was a two week period where there were about five police helicopters...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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FBC
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it turns out it's about continuing to be dynamic and being resilient and a changing environment. it kind of makes you want to vomit. >> maybe it the fact that the dynasty, if you will, i like your take on that. it's more and more crazy and just out of whack. step. melissa: thank you for coming down and helping me get to the bottom of this. >> i think we made some progress. melissa: it does like fun. you have to give them that. thousands and thousands of bottles of wine a good truck, so that something. thank you for coming on. have a great weekend. next on "money," have you ever driven by a gorgeous thousand in the living there? one man in florida may that fantasy is reality by squatting in side of waterfront mansion. i mean mansion. a bizarre law may actually let him keep it. enceinte. a potential game ginger coming in the form of a $14 billion plant in louisiana. one of the men behind it to will explain. piles of "money" coming up. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] how do you make 70,000 trades a second... ♪ reach one customer at a time? ♪ or help doctors turn billions of bytes of
it turns out it's about continuing to be dynamic and being resilient and a changing environment. it kind of makes you want to vomit. >> maybe it the fact that the dynasty, if you will, i like your take on that. it's more and more crazy and just out of whack. step. melissa: thank you for coming down and helping me get to the bottom of this. >> i think we made some progress. melissa: it does like fun. you have to give them that. thousands and thousands of bottles of wine a good truck,...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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and they do their 45 minutes in a controlled environment. >> this is what you call a dog cage. this is a canine dog cage, technically. it is. this is where dogs be at. >> katherine mcmillan has been in segregation for almost two years. >> i have an 11- to 14-year sentence as a habitual felon and i am in prison for making checks on the computer and cashing checks. i got into a fight. i beat a girl up down in the seg quad and she had two black eyes and she had to go to the hospital and i ended up coming up here. >> there are two classifications of inmates in the segregation unit, intensive control or icon, or maximum control, also known as mcon. both require isolation, but mcon inmates pose the most serious threat. >> why i do have this on? because i'm an mcon inmate. mcon inmates have to where this right here. technically, i'm supposed to have on leg irons, but because i have a medical from the doctor, i can't wear those for six months. once i become an icon inmate, i go in handcuffs. and when we put it through here and they put our hands through there and they take it off. yeah
and they do their 45 minutes in a controlled environment. >> this is what you call a dog cage. this is a canine dog cage, technically. it is. this is where dogs be at. >> katherine mcmillan has been in segregation for almost two years. >> i have an 11- to 14-year sentence as a habitual felon and i am in prison for making checks on the computer and cashing checks. i got into a fight. i beat a girl up down in the seg quad and she had two black eyes and she had to go to the...
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Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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to do it in the environment of these big gun shows, which are basically a giant gun shop with many dealers real hi doesn't add anything to it. as police chief johnson said, it takes a minute or two to go through the background check. the second thing is that the whole point of the exercise is that it keeps the criminal from coming in and buying guns. so when mr. lapierre says, well, you know, this is no good because criminals won't subject themselves to a background check, that's precisely the point. >> sure. what was the feeling in the room from you and your colleagues after hearing gabby giffords speak today? how much of an impact do you think she had? >> i think she had a real impact. i think the other moment of real impact was when her husband, captain kelly, talked about the child at gabrielle giffords' shooting who was killed by the 13th bullet, and pointed out that if the shooter hadn't had that high capacity magazine, before he got to that 13th bullet, he would have had to reload. and that shooting came to an end when the shooter had to reload. so the moment when you have 20 stop f
to do it in the environment of these big gun shows, which are basically a giant gun shop with many dealers real hi doesn't add anything to it. as police chief johnson said, it takes a minute or two to go through the background check. the second thing is that the whole point of the exercise is that it keeps the criminal from coming in and buying guns. so when mr. lapierre says, well, you know, this is no good because criminals won't subject themselves to a background check, that's precisely the...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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WJLA
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. >> reporter: do people feel manipulated because the environment is structured to make them behave in a certain way? >> how can i feel manipulated that i am being encouraged to be healthy. if anything i am grateful that a company that essentially need me to do productive work to build their business actually cares to help me be a healthier individual. i can't complain. anybody who does is perhaps misguided. >> reporter: you don't have to work for a google to like a nudge to make healthy choices even when you are not aware you are making them. for "nightline," juju chang in new york. >> eating good at google. dizzying jumps and high speed spirals we hit the slopes with snow boarding star, shaun white. [ spa lady ] i started enbrel. it's clinically proven to provide clearer skin. [ rv guy ] enbrel may not work for everyone -- and may not clear you completely, but for many, it gets skin clearer fast, within 2 months, and keeps it clearer through 6 months. [ male announcer ] enbrel may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events, including infections, tuberculo
. >> reporter: do people feel manipulated because the environment is structured to make them behave in a certain way? >> how can i feel manipulated that i am being encouraged to be healthy. if anything i am grateful that a company that essentially need me to do productive work to build their business actually cares to help me be a healthier individual. i can't complain. anybody who does is perhaps misguided. >> reporter: you don't have to work for a google to like a nudge to...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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we create an environment where they can do better or worse. we took a $3.6 billion budget deficit. as of this last week we have nearly half a million dollar surplus. [applause] after 12 years of property taxes coming up we are coming up on the third year where property tax will go down. and our overall tax burden is down. the unemployment rate in our state is now at just over 6.5%. that is not done because i created more jobs. it is because we created an environment in which it was more advantageous, particularly for small business leaders, to make investments to lead to more jobs. that is the third truth out of that brown bag common sense. i think most people understand that. the best way to create jobs is to empower the people, particularly small businesses, to be in a position to do that. those are the things that are relevant to where people are at. those same pundits who say we should change our principles talk about certain voting blocks and segments out there. i think the message we talked about, as long as we talk about it in terms of relevance -- in terms that are relevant
we create an environment where they can do better or worse. we took a $3.6 billion budget deficit. as of this last week we have nearly half a million dollar surplus. [applause] after 12 years of property taxes coming up we are coming up on the third year where property tax will go down. and our overall tax burden is down. the unemployment rate in our state is now at just over 6.5%. that is not done because i created more jobs. it is because we created an environment in which it was more...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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SFGTV2
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the food but it has bigger effects because it's going to reduce the overall load of pesticides in our environment that workers and farmers are exposed to and make our way into our air and water so those are important reductions that go beyond our own home and can affect everybody's health. some tips there are to choose hormone-free meats and milks in particular, to go with organic dried beans or organic frozen fruits or vegetables, some of our colleagues have the dirty dozen of foods to almost always buy organic and the clean 15, which are foods that you can kind of skip the organic because they have a stronger protective, like a ban ban na which has such a big peel, keeps those pesticides out, so if you're working on an economy of scale, you know, go with organic with the ones that have the highest levels of pesticides. our website has a link to those tips so i can show you where that would be. and now we're going to pop into the living room and talk about flame retardants which are an important issue for any firefighters who are working in the field because it's those burns that are going to cr
the food but it has bigger effects because it's going to reduce the overall load of pesticides in our environment that workers and farmers are exposed to and make our way into our air and water so those are important reductions that go beyond our own home and can affect everybody's health. some tips there are to choose hormone-free meats and milks in particular, to go with organic dried beans or organic frozen fruits or vegetables, some of our colleagues have the dirty dozen of foods to almost...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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KPIX
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ ♪ >> pelley: a new study is finding that smoking is taking a much greater toll on women than it used to. according to research in today's "new england journal of medicine," back in the '60s, women who smoked had three times the risk of dying of lung cancer; now the risk is 25 times higher. one reason: women have been starting to smoke earlier, and they are smoking more. another threat to women is sexual abuse, and, according to the c.d.c., nearly one in five women has been raped. and in more than half of those cases, the rapist was an intimate partner. today, america's ob-gyns put out guidelines to help doctors deal without sexual abuse, and jon lapook is here to talk about that. >> they're talking about other forms of abuse including birth control sabotage. that's where a man interf
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ ♪ >> pelley: a new study is finding that smoking is taking a much greater toll on women than it used to. according to research in today's "new england journal of medicine," back in the '60s, women who smoked had three times the risk of...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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MSNBCW
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. >> we were in this challenging environment where we were in a rural area. glenn mitchell was going to drive quite some distance to get to this house to meet a young boy. and this had been going back and forth for some time. >> you take the 70 east like all the way almost to dayton. if you leave indianapolis, 127, exit 10, right. all right, man, i'll talk to you then. bye. he's a really serious threat. i can't even believe how many kids this guy has hit on how many times. >> perverted justice had been aware of this guy for some time. apparently, he had been chatting with other decoys, and this was somebody that, you know, perverted justice thought should be exposed. >> give me a sense for the nature of the chat that went on today. >> it's very graphic. it's very -- he wants to engage in sex acts repeatedly. he wants to treat the boy like his main woman. he wants to take care of the boy. >> and he thinks you're a 14-year-old boy? >> correct. >> glen mitchell is driving from indiana. he's on one of these dark country roads. he gets lost. >> yeah. go -- make su
. >> we were in this challenging environment where we were in a rural area. glenn mitchell was going to drive quite some distance to get to this house to meet a young boy. and this had been going back and forth for some time. >> you take the 70 east like all the way almost to dayton. if you leave indianapolis, 127, exit 10, right. all right, man, i'll talk to you then. bye. he's a really serious threat. i can't even believe how many kids this guy has hit on how many times. >>...
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Jan 28, 2013
01/13
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CNNW
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we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> the problem is this -- >> all vision's workshops end with an assignment. >> you are writing a poetry memoir of who you are, what you are. >> for nio and becca, it's difficult. >> so what you feel inside, what you feel you are, how you identify yourself is what you are writing right now. >> i want you to spit from your heart. one more minute. wrap it up. we are going to make our way upstairs to the third floor to the drama studio. >> i don't have a race. i am now and forever my own race. i am tired of rabbit holing. why hide in the ground with everybody else when i can be myself and fly. [ applause ] >> black mother, white father, refuses to put herself in anybody else's box. >> when those white kids say i am one of them i can't say i feel welcome. black has always been the color of
we need to protect their environment. we have a strict quarantine system to protect the integrity of the environment. forty years on, it's still a class-a nature reserve. it's our job to look after them. ...it's my job to look after it. ♪ >>> the problem is this -- >> all vision's workshops end with an assignment. >> you are writing a poetry memoir of who you are, what you are. >> for nio and becca, it's difficult. >> so what you feel inside, what you feel you...
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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CNBC
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environment is very good. >> blankfein says improving outlook for the u.s. and other economies bodes well for goldman sachs long-term prospects. >> the things we do, all the things we do, correlate with growth. we advise people on acquisitions when they have the confidence to acquire things. finance them when they do things. manage risky assets which people only put money in risky assets when they are confident. so i think the economy is growing and i think the cycle is long so i'm optimistic. >> he estimates that as the cycle improves, so should goldman's one of most profitable businesses. a business that's been lackluster recently. >> the conditions are quite right for very low level of interest rates. the fact that industries are consolidating. a lot of opportunities overseas. and i tell you, everybody in his own industry tracks a lot of stuff. we track m & a as a percentage of gdp. it is a much lower level than we should be at this part of the recovery and i'm kind of at a loss to explain why. >> blankfein did say buyers and sellers seem to disagree on t
environment is very good. >> blankfein says improving outlook for the u.s. and other economies bodes well for goldman sachs long-term prospects. >> the things we do, all the things we do, correlate with growth. we advise people on acquisitions when they have the confidence to acquire things. finance them when they do things. manage risky assets which people only put money in risky assets when they are confident. so i think the economy is growing and i think the cycle is long so i'm...
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91
Jan 30, 2013
01/13
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KQED
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article, and i think peter fisher was quoted in that article, there is a very sound point to a low-rate environment and banks effectively being unwilling to lend at these low rates. i think that is a fantastic point for the near term. more long-term, our real worry is about the exit. >> susie: real quickly, i want to ask you about the jobs report that comes out on friday because more people get jobs, it is good for the economy. >> right. >> susie: might there be a surprise that more hiring is going on? >> we do not expect any surprises, at least not any upward surprises. it is interesting, almost over any time bucket over the last year, the average job gain has been about 150,000 mer month. 150,000 -- per month. where the aggregate demand hasn't picked up, companies are not picking up the hiring. we're looking for 150,000 a month, per average. >> susie: that's kind of look warm, but thank you, tom for coming on the show. we've been talking with tom porcelli, chief mist at rbc cap >> tom: despite a strong end to the year, ford stock fell more than 4.5% today. the concern is, ford doesn't think this
article, and i think peter fisher was quoted in that article, there is a very sound point to a low-rate environment and banks effectively being unwilling to lend at these low rates. i think that is a fantastic point for the near term. more long-term, our real worry is about the exit. >> susie: real quickly, i want to ask you about the jobs report that comes out on friday because more people get jobs, it is good for the economy. >> right. >> susie: might there be a surprise...
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79
Feb 1, 2013
02/13
by
WMAR
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. >> the crowd involvement, everything is just a very cool working environment. hopefully we are able to bring the excitement and energy to the people watching at home. >> reporter: ravens fans love the outdoor sets. >> my husband made me get up at 6:00 to see mike and mike. all time favorite. >> lot of ravens fans here, that makes it more fun. >> reporter: it took technicians a month to build the complex, they will tear it down monday and cleared out in a little under a week. don harrison, abc2 news. >>> all this week, we have been down way down yonder in new orleans, helping out the st. bernard project, helping families struggling to rebuild in new orleans. you can donate to hurricane katrina victims, head to abc2news.com, pick ravens nation in the program, designation section. >>> it's purple friday. we are counting down to the super bowl. live with a special tonight. live coverage of the fan hoopla and a breakdown of everything to expect this sunday starts here at 7:00. >>> the cold snap is back, along with colder temperatures, came a little snow this morning
. >> the crowd involvement, everything is just a very cool working environment. hopefully we are able to bring the excitement and energy to the people watching at home. >> reporter: ravens fans love the outdoor sets. >> my husband made me get up at 6:00 to see mike and mike. all time favorite. >> lot of ravens fans here, that makes it more fun. >> reporter: it took technicians a month to build the complex, they will tear it down monday and cleared out in a little...
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in the last ten thousand years caused a similar adaptation in the big change in the environment was the development of agriculture actual since findings published in the journal nature support the often argued hypothesis that dogs evolved from wolves who found new sources of food in the trash on the outskirts of human settlements after a while eating our food these wild wolves began to tolerate contact with us and were eventually brought into households for protection and work and ultimately companionship. human tolerant and was fully possibly fully domesticated canids ancestors of today's domesticated dogs may have existed as many as thirty three thousand years ago and archaeological remains show dogs and humans sharing the same graves eleven thousand years ago which corresponds with the dawn of agriculture the next logical question is. when did dogs is did dogs to domesticate themselves or did humans have a role in the process the evidence of natural selection and the amount and efficiency of key digestive enzymes and dogs supports the notion the dogs may have actually domesticate
in the last ten thousand years caused a similar adaptation in the big change in the environment was the development of agriculture actual since findings published in the journal nature support the often argued hypothesis that dogs evolved from wolves who found new sources of food in the trash on the outskirts of human settlements after a while eating our food these wild wolves began to tolerate contact with us and were eventually brought into households for protection and work and ultimately...
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80
Jan 31, 2013
01/13
by
CSPAN
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eye 80
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it has a rugged ability, meant for a combat or environment that one would be placed in facing adversaries, human beings, people. that weapon can be retrofitted with other devices to enhance your offensive capability. the weapon itself has features to adjusted, optics sites, for example, that can cost hundreds of dollars and i have shot this weapon many times. it would enhance our capability in various tactical maneuvers whether it is from the shoulder or the hip or whether you choose to spray fire the weapon or individually shoot from the shoulder. the optic sites are amazing. the technology advances that weapon as -- that weapon is the weapon of our time. that is where we find ourselves today and certainly, i believe, is meant for the battlefield and a public safety environment only. >> thank you. mr. chairman, before i yield my time, i would like to submit testimony of maya ronman who is here today lost her father in a shooting in september in minneapolis. i would like unanimous consent to submit your testimony for the record. -- her testimony for the record. >> as we indicated earlier,
it has a rugged ability, meant for a combat or environment that one would be placed in facing adversaries, human beings, people. that weapon can be retrofitted with other devices to enhance your offensive capability. the weapon itself has features to adjusted, optics sites, for example, that can cost hundreds of dollars and i have shot this weapon many times. it would enhance our capability in various tactical maneuvers whether it is from the shoulder or the hip or whether you choose to spray...
121
121
Jan 31, 2013
01/13
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CSPAN
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i'm at the intersection of public policy and advanced technology for environment and safety. if it is a fantastic deal to be in now. it is the wave of the future. advanced vehicles, and advanced technologies. we work with the government on regulatory issues, collect a lot of information on the future of energy, where it's headed in the u.s. and globally. and we tried to use the information to help steer toyota's advanced development. guest: one of the high points is greenhouse gases and fuel economy for our vehicles. the auto industry has signed up for some fairly aggressive standards that will take us to the 2025 model year. they are aggressive standards. consumers will have to embrace the technologies we're trying to get out there. host: what does that really mean? guest: the target is 54 miles per hour by 2025. we have a lot of work to do. our strategy is are hybrid strategy. toyota had 16% of our new vehicle fleet were hybrid vehicles. the industry itself is that 3%. we intend to maintain that leadership. host: that means you have to do with the future of what a car will
i'm at the intersection of public policy and advanced technology for environment and safety. if it is a fantastic deal to be in now. it is the wave of the future. advanced vehicles, and advanced technologies. we work with the government on regulatory issues, collect a lot of information on the future of energy, where it's headed in the u.s. and globally. and we tried to use the information to help steer toyota's advanced development. guest: one of the high points is greenhouse gases and fuel...
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61
Jan 30, 2013
01/13
by
WJZ
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eye 61
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article, and i think peter fisher was quoted in that article, there is a very sound point to a low-rate environment and banks effectively being unwilling to lend at these low rates. i think that is a fantastic point for the near term. more long-term, our real worry is about the exit. >> susie: real quickly, i want to ask you about the jobs report that comes out on friday because more people get jobs, it is good for the economy. >> right. >> susie: might there be a surprise that more hiring is going on? >> we do not expect any surprises, at least not any upward surprises. it is interesting, almost over any time bucket over the last year the average job gain has been about 150,000 mer month. 150,000 -- per month. where the aggregate demand hasn't picked up companies are not picking up the hiring. we're looking for 150,000 a month per average. >> susie: that's kind of look warm but thank you, tom for coming on the show. we've been talking with tom porcelli, chief mist at rbc cap >> tom: despite a strong end to the year, ford stock fell more than 4.5% today. the concern is, ford doesn't think this year
article, and i think peter fisher was quoted in that article, there is a very sound point to a low-rate environment and banks effectively being unwilling to lend at these low rates. i think that is a fantastic point for the near term. more long-term, our real worry is about the exit. >> susie: real quickly, i want to ask you about the jobs report that comes out on friday because more people get jobs, it is good for the economy. >> right. >> susie: might there be a surprise...